Elfener 4 days ago

- Respect the user's prefers-color-scheme (HN fails this one)

- Make sure your text is not to small (HN also fails this one spectacularly)

- Lines should not be longer than like 132ch

- There should be left and right margins as to not have letters directly on the edge of the screen.

- For fonts, I prefer that a site just uses "sans-serif", "serif", and "monospace", but most people don't choose their browser default fonts, so for a general audience I'm not sure on this

2
throwaway519 6 hours ago

Yet in mobile HN wins on line length and margins. It's impossible to have one without the other.

On desktop HN outperforms even an analogy with email where the trend seems to throw the user's functionality to the side where margins and padding result in only 5-6 emails appearing in an inbox list. No wonder people need AI to sort their mail if they can't even see it.

brudgers 4 days ago

HN fails this one…

Which suggests that content wins and form just needs to be good enough for the intended audience.

To put it another way, san-serif is usually the best font absent a brand identity because it is the simplest thing that might work.

The problem is there’s no shortcut to typographic expertise. Design is a process not two tips and one trick.

throwaway519 6 hours ago

Herzberg hygiene and motivation.

johneth 1 day ago

> Which suggests that content wins and form just needs to be good enough for the intended audience.

I agree to an extent, but why not put the extra effort into making that content easier to read, especially for those whose vision is degraded (which is ultimately all of us given enough time).